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Brazil’s bad loans on non-earmarked credit at record high, despite debt relief drive

By Thomson Reuters Jul 1, 2026 | 8:40 AM

By Marcela Ayres

BRASILIA, July 1 (Reuters) – Delinquency rates on Brazilian loans not tied to a specific purpose rose to 6.2% in May from 6.1% in April, reaching the highest level since ​the central bank’s data series began in March 2011.

The increase ‌for so-called non-earmarked loans came despite the government’s launch in early May of a new phase of its consumer debt renegotiation program, which offers Treasury-backed guarantees to lower borrowing costs for eligible consumers earning more than five times the minimum wage.

In its ‌monetary policy ​report last week, the central bank cited ⁠rising defaults in vehicle lending, ⁠unsecured personal credit and payroll-deducted loans to private-sector workers as the main drivers of deteriorating asset quality in non-earmarked credit.

Default rates in all three segments increased in May, reaching 6.5% for vehicle loans, 14.2% ​for unsecured personal credit and 7.9% for payroll loans to private-sector workers.

“Recent measures to promote household debt renegotiation tend to reduce delinquency rates ⁠in eligible credit lines in the coming ⁠months,” the central bank said in the report.

Last year, ​President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva’s government introduced new rules to expand payroll ​lending to private-sector workers, aiming to boost a segment whose ‌outstanding balance jumped 140.3% from a year earlier to 109.2 billion reais ($21.03 billion) in May.

At the time, the government said many borrowers would use the new framework to refinance more expensive debt with cheaper payroll loans, whose ⁠instalments are deducted directly from wages.

Central bank data show interest rates on payroll loans for private-sector workers stood at 54.1% a year in May, compared ⁠with 142.7% for unsecured ‌personal credit.

Brazil’s benchmark interest rate stands at 14.25%, with ⁠policymakers signaling that, despite an easing cycle that ​began in ‌March, borrowing costs will need to remain in ​restrictive territory to ⁠bring inflation, running at 4.8% over 12 months, back to the 3% target.

Against that backdrop, the country’s total credit stock rose 0.6% month-on-month to 7.3 trillion reais in May, up 9.5% from a year earlier, easing slightly from annual growth of 9.6% in April.

($1 = 5.1914 reais)

(Reporting by Marcela Ayres. Editing ​by Mark Potter)